题目:
在喝公事酒、外事交往酒时,喝到自己酒量的()就差不多了。
A.1/3
B.2/3
C.1/2
D.一醉方休
答案:
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下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。
参考答案:A解析: 确认测试的任务是验证软件的功能和性能,以及其他特性是否满足需求规格说明中确定的各种需求。
在喝公事酒、外事交往酒时,喝到自己酒量的()就差不多了。
A.1/3
B.2/3
C.1/2
D.一醉方休
被转码了,请点击底部 “查看原文 ” 或访问 https://www.tikuol.com/2017/1217/40b005407cced82c765b2dddd2fe5b0c.html
下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。
参考答案:A解析: 确认测试的任务是验证软件的功能和性能,以及其他特性是否满足需求规格说明中确定的各种需求。
下列各项,不属于药物诊疗道德要求的是()
A.必须明确药物的性能、适应证和禁忌证
B.掌握药物的配伍禁忌
C.根据国家法规处方用药
D.预防药源性疾病
E.尽量使用进口药
某男,35岁。劳累后淋雨,恶寒发热1天,肢节疼痛,继而眼睑浮肿,全身浮肿,偶有咳嗽。舌苔薄白,脉浮紧。
治法宜选用
A.健脾化湿,通阳利水
B.宣肺解毒,利水消肿
C.疏风清热,宣肺行水
D.分利湿热
E.温运脾阳,以利水湿
政府提供的物品()
A、一定是公共物品
B、极少部分是公共物品
C、大部分是私人物品
D、不都是公共物品
The Month of January offered those who track the ups and downs of the U. S. economy 92 significant data releases and announcements to digest. That’s according to a calendar compiled by the investment bank UBS. The number doesn’t include corporate earnings, data from abroad or informal indicators like, say, cardboard prices (a favorite of Alan Greenspan’s back in the day). It was not always thus. "One reads with dismay of Presidents Hoover and then Roosevelt designing policies to combat the Great Depression of the 1930s on the basis of such sketchy data as stock price indices, freight car loadings, and incomplete indices of industrial production," writes the University of North Carolina’s Richard Froyen in his macroeconomics textbook.
But that was then The Depression inspired the creation of new measures like gross domestic product. (It was gross national product back in those days, but the basic idea is the same. ) Wartime planning needs and advances in statistical techniques led to another big round of data improvements in the 1940s. And in recent decades, private firms and associations aiming to serve the investment community have added lots of reports and indexes of their owrL Taken as a whole, this profusion of data surely has increased our understanding of the economy and its ebb and flow. It doesn’t seem to have made us any better at predicting the future, though; perhaps that would be too much to ask But what is troubling at a time like this, with the economy on everyone’s mind, is how misleading many economic indicators can be about the present.
Consider GDP. In October, the Commerce Department announced--to rejoicing in the media, on Wall Street and in the White House--that the economy had grown at a 3.5% annual pace in the third quarter. By late December, GDP had been revised downward to a less impressive 2.2%, and revisions to come could ratchet it down even more (or revise it back up). The first fourth-quarter GDP estimate comes out Jan. 29. Some are saying it could top 5%. If it does, should we really believe it
Or take jobs. In early December, the Labor Department’s monthly report surprised on the upside-- and brought lots of upbeat headlines--with employers reporting only 11, 000 jobs lost and the unemployment rate dropping from 10.2% to 10%. A month later, the surprise was in the other directio--unemployment has held steady, but employers reported 85,000 fewer jobs. Suddenly the headlines were downbeat, and pundits were pontification about the political implications of a stalled labor market. Chances are, the disparity between the two reports was mostly statistical noise. Those who read great meaning into either were deceiving themselves. It’s a classic case of information overload making it harder to see the trends and patterns that matter. In other words, we might be better off paying less (or at least less frequent) attention to data.
With that in mind, I asked a few of my favorite economic forecasters to name an indicator or two that I could afford to start ignoring. Three said they disregarded the index of leading indicators, originally devised at the Commerce Department but now compiled by the Conference Board, a business group. Forecasters want new hard data, and the index "consists entirely of already released information and the Conference Board’s forecasts," says Jan Hatzius of Goldman Sachs. (The leading-indicators index topped a similar survey by the Chicago Tribune in 2005, it turns out. ) The monthly employment estimate put out by pay roll-service firm ADP got two demerits, mainly because it doesn’t do a great job of predicting the Labor Department employment numbers that are released two days later. And consumer-sentiment indexes, which offer the tantalizing prospect of predicting future spending patterns but often function more like an echo chamber, got the thumbs-down from two more forecasters.
The thing is, I already ignore all these (relatively minor) indicators. I had been hoping to learn I could skip GDP or the employment report. I should have known that professional forecaster wouldn’t forgo real data. As Mark Zandi of Moody’s Economy. com put it in an e-mail, "I cherish all economic indicators. "
Most of us aren’t professional forecasters. What should we make of the cacophony of monthly and weekly data The obvious advice is to focus on trends and ignore the noise. But the most important economic moments come when trends reverse--when what appears to be noise is really a sign that the world has changed. Which is why, in these uncertain times, we jump whenever a new economic number comes out. Even one that will be revised in a month.
What do the two reports of the unemployment rate tell us().
A. They display the serious political implications of a stalled labor market.
B. They are much more useful in helping us understand the situation of unemployment.
C. The trends and patterns of economic life are more important than expected.
D. The overload of information would be less significant than expected.
根据个体独立性程度来划分性格类型,一般把善于独立思考,不易受外来因素的干扰,能够独立地发现问题和解决问题,但有时把自己的意见强加于人的性格类型称为()。
A.内倾型
B.顺从型
C.外倾型
D.独立型